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THE DAILY BEE--TUESDAY, AUGUST 1 (480, c OUNCIL BLUFEFES COMMISSION MERCHANTS, City Market, Conneil Bluffs, lows, WHOLESALE F Genera! Agents for the Celebrated Mills of H. D. Kansas, and Queen Bee Mil Ecterence, Smith & Critenden, Uouncil Bluffe, | LOUR HOUSE, Kush & Co., Golden Eagle Flour, Leavenwosth s, Sioux Falls, Dakota. STATIGNERY AND SEAMAIN, AND RETAIL PRINTER'S GOODS, COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. TITLE, ABSTRAS Lands and Lots Boug AT LOW MONEY TO LOAN NOTARIE3 PUBLIC AND COUNCIL BLUFFS T _OFEFIGE X & © O ht and Sold. RATES. ' CONVEYANCERS. . 10WA. I — R P2 RSOIN, 15 North Main Street. WHOLESALE DEALER Ready-fitted uppers, {n calt skin and kip. o0ds apportaining to the shoo trado. Gords sold a8 cheap s in the East., IN SHOE FINDINGS. Osk and Hemlock SOLE LEATHER, and al MRS, ‘NORRIS' NEW FOR STYLISH SPRING MILLINERY GO TO MILLINERY STORE PATTERN BONNETS AND CHILDREN’S HATS A SPECIALTY. 105 South Main Street. - - - - - Council Bluffs Ia. That never require crimping, at Mra. J. J. Goos ¢ othor hair dealer. Also o ver and colored nets. Waves made from Iadies' whore. All goods warranted as reproser.ted. ull line of awitches, ctc., at s reatly reduced prices. Halr Store, at prices niever batero touched by Also gold, Do not fail to vall before purchasing RS. J. J. GOOD, 29 Maln stree, Council Bluffs, Towa. own hair, Bethesda BATHING HOUSE! At Bryant’s Spring, Cor. Broadway and Union Sts. COUNCIL BLUFFS. Plain, Medicated, Electric, Plunge, Douch, Shower, Hot and 'Cold Baths. Com- potent’ wale and temale nurses and attendants alwaya on hand, and the best of care and atten- tion given patrons, Special attention given to batning children, Inyestigation aud patronage solicited ; DR. A, H SrupLey & Co. 106 Upper Broadway. Treatment of chronic diseases V. por, Dr, Stu made a spe A REMOVED without the drawing of blood or use of l kni ures lung diseases, AND OTHER rofula, Liver Com- TUMORS: Rheum, Scald Head, Catarr, we and granulated Eyes, - crofulous U male Discase: of all *kinds. Also Kidney and Hemorrhoids or Piles cured Venerial discases. ‘money refunded. All diseascs treated upor: the principleof veget- able reform, without the use of mercurial pois- ons or the Knife, Electro Vapor or Medicated Baths, furnished Who' desiro them. Hoeraia or Rupture radically cured by the use the Elastic belt Truss and Piaster, which has superior in the worla. CONSULTATION FREE. TALL ON OR ADDRESS Drs. B. Rice and F. O, Miller, COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ta. LIVERY, Feed and Sale Stables, 18 North First Street, Bouyuet's old stand, Council Biuffs, Towa. WILLARD SM{TH, Prop. W.D.STILLMAN, Practitioner of Hemeopathy, consulting Physicianand Surgeon. Office and residence 616 Willow avenue, Coun- <l Bluffs, lowa, SINTON & WEST. DENTISTS. 14 Pearl £treet, Council Bluffs. First-class Extracting and filiing & spocialty. work guaranteed, DR. A. P. HANCHETT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, No. 14 Pearl Street. Houas, 9 a. m, to 2,8nd2 p,m, to 6 p, m. Residence, 120 Eancroft stieet. Telephonic connection with Central office, F. T. SEYBERT, M. D, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, COUNCIL BLUFFS, - - IA. Oflice No, 5, Everett Block, Broad- way, over A, Louie’s Restaurant. fiérchants Restaurant J. A. ROSS, Proprietor. Corner Broadway and Fourth Streets, Good accommodations, good fare and cour- teous treatment. S. E. MAXON, AROE X T, &1 G X. Office over savinga bank, COUNCIL BLUFFS, . . REAL ESTATE. W. C. James, In connection with his law and i - Iowa. eollcction businessbuys and sclls real estate, Persons wishing to buy or sell city property call &b his office, over Bushnell's book store, Pearl stroct, EDWIN J. ABBOTT. Justice of the Peace and Notary Public. 4i16Broadway, Council Bluffs Deeds sndmorteayes drawn and ackoow! (ged HAIR GOODS. In Steck and M;nufactur- ‘ed to Order. Waves Made From Your Own Hair, TOILET ARTICLES, All Goods Warracted as Represented, and Frices Guaranteed. MRS. D. A BENEDICT, 337 W. Broadway, Council Bluffs; - - - Iowa | MBS, E. J. HARDING, M, D., Medical Electrician AND GYGNECOLOGIST. Graduste of Electropathic Institution, Phila- delphia, Penua, Difics Cur, Broadway & Blenn Ave, COUNCIL BLUFFS, I0WA. The treatment of all diseases rnd puintal dit- fleultics peculiar Lo feales a specialty. J. G. TIPTON, Attorrey & Counsellor. Office over First National Bank, Council Bluffs Towa. Will practice in tho state and foderal courts FRESH FIsH! Game and Poultry, B. DANEHY'S, 136 Upper Broadway JNO. JAY FRAINEY, Justice of the Peace, 314 BROADWAY, Council Bluffs, W. B. MAVES, Loans and Real Estate. Proprietor of abstracts of Pottawattamic county. Office corner of Broadway and Main strects, Council Bluffs, Towa. JOHN STEINER, M. D, (Deutscher Arzt.) ROOM 6, EVERETT'S BLOCK, Council Bluffs, aseases of women and children a_spoclalty. P, J. MONTGOMERY M. D., FrEE DISPENSARY EVERY SATURDAY, Can always be found a Towa. Office In Everett's block, Pearl treet, Res! dence 048 Fourth street. Office hours trom § to 2. m,2todand 7 o8p.m. Conncil luffs F. C. CLARK, PRACTICAL DENTIST. Pearl opposite the postoffice. One of the oldest practitioners in Council Blufts. Batls {staction guarantesd in all cases DR. F. P. BELLINGER, EYE AND EAR SURGEON, WITH DR, CHARLES DEETKEN, Office over drug store, 414 Broadway, Councii Bluffs, lowa, Al discases of the eye and ear treated under the most approved method and all cures guaranteed, JOHN LINDT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Will practice in all Stite and U ited States Courta. * Speaks German Languago EMINENT AMERICANS, The Rich and the Poor of the National Senators Washingten letter to Cincinnati Inquirer, “‘Are there any rich men in con- gress!” asked a pretty country rose- bud in the senate reserved gallery yesterday. ““Why, certainly,” he replied. “I thought,” said the unsophistical little ingenue, ‘‘‘hat they were all politicians—idle beer drinkers, just a little above the fellows we see about the taverns at home, poor in purse as in character.” @ Never more mistaken in your life,” I said laughingly. ‘‘Most of the men down below thero are politicians, but few of them are poor, and fewer still are idle or drink beer, The majority of them are well to-do, and the rich mea alone would make a quorum, You can can see at a glance that they are not ragged or dirty, Windom there or “‘Cerre Gordo'' Williams are types of the rest. Windom, of port- ly form, neatly oclad, large head, broad face, high forehead, silk- en Shair and ‘side whiskers, closely cut, resembles the conventional bank- erin ‘The Banker's Daughter,” Wil- liams, whose six feet of good substan- tial fleeh and blood and bones, is attired in the traditional senatorial black, with a broad expanse of shirt front dotted with good-sized gold studs and worked with a frill, and crowned with a fresh brown wig, which gazes frowningly down on its new acquunt- ance, that military blue and black mustache which only yesterday was gray, looks every inch the Kentucky gentleman, sah, ot the day before yes- terday, sah. No one would for a moment imagine, where these gentle- men in another place and unknown, that the woll groomed Windom, as he toys with his light gold chain, and the trimly-tended Williams, as he takes snuft from the senate snufl:box, deftly opened for him by the dainty little page in Vandyke costume, broad red necktie, over broad white collar and all, who serves the old bucks of antebellum fame with the fragrant tobacco which has been so long in the possession of old white-haired Isaac Bassett, were politicians, Bat they are, and very good ones, too. Win- dom is planning skillfully his own re- turn to the senate and his own nomin- ation for the presidency. Wiiliams is scheming against greater odds, and less ehrewdly, for a re-election to his present seat; and even while the odor of the snuff and the memory of that little bit of Vandyke coloring are fresh in the senses, each turns from pleasure to business, Windom from the watch-chain and the fresh-faced old Kentucky gentlemen to an influ- ential constituent, and the frilled war- rior ‘all of the olden time’ turns from his snuff and the sensible Quaker-like countenauce of the father of the ‘Windoms’ to make a speech on to- bacco that will make clad the Ken- tucky heart. Bothare well off, though, and Windom is said, to be, as the re- suls of wise dealings in Northern Pa- cific, even rich, ‘‘By the way, that snuff box has a history, my dear; a history as long and almost as interesting as that of its custodian, fresh-faced, white- haired, old TIsaac Bassett. That snuft box, which rests by night, and nowadays most of the time by day, in a cunning little niche just behind Bassett’s great arm chair on the vice president’s dais, came into the senate before Daniel Webster or Henry Clay. It was an important factor in politics when Abraham Lincoln was splitting rails and Jefferron Davis was beginuing to dream that splendid dream cf imperial power which has made his life a wreck unto this day. It did not live 1n that curious nest then, perhaps, but in a man’s pocket, out of which it came so fre- quently that its face is as smooth as polished wood can be, However, it was present and potential for many a day before old Bussett, then u young and lusty youth and a protege of Web. ster, 2ame into the chamber as a mes- aenger and suggested, after generous- ly providing snufl’ for this and that impecanious or thoughtless member of the senate for a session or two that a snuff-box be permanently stationed in that odd little corner to the left of the vice president’s chair. There it has lived eyer since, and to this day an expenditure for the fincst Scotch snuft appears in the account of the disburse- ment of the contingent fund, side by side in this year of grace with the ice, Apollinaris water, fancy fane, cologue waters and Chinese mattings appropriations. We do not begrudge this quaint old historic character a plentitul supply of the best Maccoboy or what not, Has he not touched the hands and pleased the noses of hun- dreds of the wise and bright and hand- some men of the past? He has been the companion and friend of Webster and Hayne and Calhoun and Clay and Sumner, and a host of others whone memories rise in gigantic proportions, as did the geni of old out of the silver box, when we lift the well-worn, highly-polished lid and sniff the odor of the fragrant fragments within But to return, ‘‘There are some poor men in the senate, There aresome men 1 every collection of men who do not know how to make or keep roney I say this because you migge otherwise sup- pose, looking down on them, that they were all rich, There is very little difference outwardly between Windom, for instance, and Ransom, of North Carelina, Both are hand- some men, and boch look like com- fortable millionaires, Ransom is a poor wan, though—a gentleman, and a handsome one, who likes to see his photegraph life-sizs in the windows of an Avenue photographer’s shop—a gentleman and a lawyer, but not a money-getter. He is not alone in this, though. Let us look over the alphabetical list here in The Congres- sional Directory, ‘Aldrich,’ it says first, in its own terse way, *Aldrich, N. W. Rhode Island,’ the youngest member of the senate, T'all, hand handsome, silver huired, already he has made # fortune in his forty-one yoars of life, and now presides over & bank or two as well as a haif-dozer other mercantile enterprises, Ther comes Allison, of Towa, the soft-hair- od and velvet-faced, who has beenrich for years, Anthony, she oldest mem ber of the senate, Aldrich’s colleague, whose declining years are cheered by the handsome pecuniary results of years of hard work. Bayard, who liqes quietly, is supposed to have inherited a moderate fortune from nis father. Beck, the Kentucky Scotchman, tall, loose jointed but gracefnl, and with an ever ready tongue, has been, until recently, poor, But he had the good fortune to invest a little money in the northwest part of the city before it was covered with handsome residences, and before Lorin Blodgatt, of your oity, discovered that he owned it all, and he is now considered a rich man, He dresses aud lines very plainly still, though. He has good old-fashioned Scotch ro tions ou the subject. Blair, of New Hampshire, who was so easily led nstray by the wily Shipherc ruano fame, is the first poor man on the list He owns some New Hampshire rocks and a fluent tongue, but little else Brown, wno now represents Georgia alone, is one of the millionaires of the He made it all in railroads and in cognate speculation. Butler, tho professional beauty of tho senate, has nothing, 1 believe, but_his beaut: ful face and his father’s plar South Carolina. Call, of | neither handsome nor rich, al he has a pictureeque Spanish face and some money. Camden is & West Vir ginia millionaire, coal and oil and lumber and iron--a smaré lawyer and good business man withal. Of course you know that J. Donald Cameron is rich, and will be richer, and that his new house here, like his home in Harrisburg, is one of the sights, His Wisconsin namesake, Angus Cameron, is comparatively poor. So are Chil- Senate, cott, the amiable ‘stop-gap’ senator from Colorado, sent on here when Teller was translated from the senate to the cabinet; and Cock- rell, of Missouri, a watchtul democrat and good lawyer; and COoke, the big- headed, big-bearded, big-hearted Tex- a8 democrat; and Conger, the dyspep tic, dried-up, pugnacious Michigan re- publican. Lavid Davis, though- dear old Jumbo--is rich, He is able to entertain very handsomely, and does it very gracefully. Iuvestments in lands and railroads well mavaged made him, as well off as his nameeaks, Heury G. Davis, of Deor Park and West Virginia, who started in as a brakeman on the Baltimore & Ohio forty yearsago, the rich men that they aro. Dawes, of Massachusetts, 1s poor. Edmunds, of Vermont, is well-to-do. Fair, of Mackey, Fair, Flood & O'Brien, Virginia City, Nevada, is the richest man in the senate and the most unostentatious. Hoe is generlly is the background. Farley, of California, is poor, and so is Frye, of Maine. They have little but their salaries. Ferry, of Michigan, who has been at times prominently before the country, some- times in a pleasant and sometimes in an unpleasant situation, is rich, as a result of speculation in all sorts of things in Michigan, Garland, of Ar- kausas, in some respects the soundest lawyer in congress, is poor; so is George, ex-chief justice of Mississippi, who made that curious speech the other day predicting communism un- loss a change should occur 1 the atti- tude of capital and labor. Gorman, of Maryland, and his colleague Groomo are in very comfortable circum- stances, Gorman used to be a clerk in the senate postoflice, and the boss eatcher 1n local base ball club. Two Crops of Potatoes in One Year. It has been discovered that two crops ot Early Rose potatoes can be grown on the same land in a single season, and it is worth testing in this section, Take young potatoes of this year's growth and dry for a few days in the shade, then put them ina trench or cold frame, throw water over them, cover with a few inches of dirt, and then place straw over the frame to prevent too much evapora- tion. At sundown place over them a glass sash and remove it the next morning. Ia four or five days the potatoes will sprout, when they can be cut to two eyes and planted. Whole potatoes do not avswer as well as those that are cut. Plant in checks two and a half feet apart, or in drilly three feet by eighteen inches, and cover lightly From the digging of early potatoes fo the middle of August is the proper time for the second crop Cnltivate them on the level method, and do not hill. The poiuts to be ob- served are to use plenty of fertilizer, a8 two crops exhaust the land; select good meed; be sure that the tubers aro sprouted before planting; plant shal- low, and endeavor to take advantage of the season. Or, to give a more economical method, the smaller pota- toes, provided they are good, together with large ones, 1f desired, may be cut and bedded like sweet potatoes, and when they are well sprouted can be taken up in the same manuner, re- moving all but the most vigorous sprout, and transplanted. In doing this it is well, if posgible, to take up the plant entire, with the decaying potato adhering, The aboveis recom- mended by a fruit growers’ and farm- ers’ asgociation, and it appears to he a good method for growing early po- tatoes as well as late ones, Buckin's Arnica Salve, The Brst SALVE in the world for Cuts Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Lut Rheum, Fe ver Sores, Tetter, Chap) lands, Chil , Corns, and all skin eruptions, an’ tively cures piles, It is gnaranteed to wive wsatisfactfon or money refunded Price, 25 cents per box, For sale by G, F. Goodman Very Old People. Sidney Crawford, of Bridgewater, Va., is 115 years old. Dr., George Thomson has just died at Madison, Ind., aged 108 years, Charles Brand, of North Vernon county, Mo., is 96 yewrs of age, and his hair has just returned to its nat- ural color, biack, Although Rubert W who is now T years of age, ina ve-cran of the war of 1812, he has never had a pen- son. He is a resdont of Cocil county, Maryland Aunt Dinah, an Indian, living on the Onondaga reservation, is 108 years of age. She has just been granted a pension of $8 a month, with £400 a8 back pension. The graduating class of the West Newton, M:ss., high school, were en- tertained for over an hour lately with a lecture on astronomy by Seth Dayis, who 18 96 year: " Henry Ga , of Lower Swatara township, Pa., is 98 years of age He was working in his harvest field last week, John Podeon, of the same place, was 4 years old on the 24th of Muy, Henry Johnson was sold on the auction block in King and Queen county, Virginia, when 18 years of aze. He served Gen. Dick Taylor he was (ransferred to Gen, An- {deew Jackion's houschold, He was with Gen, Jackson at the baftle of New Orleans, He is now living at 0 erlin, at the age of 100 years, The centennial anniversary of Mrs, Jseph Harris at Wheeler-End, En. gland, was the ccoasion of & jubiiee 10 which the whole village joined. A triomphal arch was erected, under which the old lady rode in an open carringe drawn by over 200 men and women, all of whom were her lineal endauts. She has been the her of sixteen children, The el now living is 81 years old, ana the youngest 50. —— A BIG FISH-SHIP, Which s to Carry Millions of Speci- mens to the London Bxposition. Philadeiphia Record The government is building at Wil mington n splencid iron steamship which will cost nearly 8200,000, and espocially constructed for the fish commission, to gather and preserve seafish. The vesselwill bo sent to London with millions of specimeons of small fish and sea bugs, to be exhibitod at tho great fish ex- position to be held there in May. She is to bo chrisioned *“The Albatross;” is 200 feot lovg, 27 feet 6 inches beam, 16 feet 9 inches depth of hold, and of 800 tons burthen, She will be supplied with a deop-sea dredge with eight miles of wire rope, for the purpose of fishing up specimens of an- imal life which may bo found miles be- low the surface of the ocean. Past Assistant Engineer G, W, Baird is superintending the construction of the ship, which is being built at Pusey, Jones & Co.’s yards, and will be launched in about four months The Albatross will be under the direction of United States Fish Commissioner Baird, who will go with her to the Lon- don Exposition, which will bethegreat- st fish show over seen in the world. There will be on exhibition there every kind of animal known to exist in the seas and rivers of the world, from a whale to a tadpole. All the leading fish culturists and dealers in the United States will sond exhibits, which, in addition to the millions of presorved exhibits senc by the govern- ment, will probably make our display the most complete of any on exhibi- tion The largest number of govern- ment exhibits will be microscopic specimens, but thousanda of curious and valuable specimens preserved in liquor, and now at Smithsoman insti- tution, will be put on board the Al- batross and sent ove An Ohlo Romance, Cloveland Plaindealer. T'wo or threo years ago a Mr. Far- ney took charge of the high school in Buena Vista, O, One of his papils was Miss Woolftan, and almost in stantly teacher and pupil fell in love and became engaged, Old Mr. Woolftan refused to consent to their union. Farney resigned the school, but before he left town he called, with che Woolftan consent, for the last in- terview with the beautiful brunette. At his request she sang the sadful song of Burns: “‘Had we never loved sae kindly, had we nover loved sae blindly,” they wouldn’t have come to grief. Then Mr. Farney went away in the darkness aud tears, and three days afterward his body was found in the Ohio river six miles above Cincin- nati, and buried, The girl was in coneolable, of course, but last June she married a gentleman who con- sented to take her with the perfect understanding that she did not, could not, would, and should not love him. In December the husband was killed in a raib oad accident .n the Cincin- nati Southern, near Lexington. The widow withdrew entirely from so ciety, but in March a gentleman pre- sented himself for acceptance, and in a twinkling was accepted. It was Mr, Farney, who was not dead, and never had been, the man drowned above Cincinnati being another party alto- her, whose identity will never be known; and when the June roses blossomed the wedding bells of Buena Vista broke into joyous peals once more in behalf of the Wooltan girl, A Baptist Minister's Experience. I am a Baptist Minister, and before 1 even thought of bei prpryman, 1 grad- uated in medicine, but left a lucrative | rac- tice for my present profession, 40 years ago. 1 wisfor many vesrs a sufferer from i “Tiosas’ Ecteerrio Orn, cured I wan also troubled with hoarse- ness, and Thomas’ Kclectric Oil always res lieved me, My wife and child had diph- theris, and “Thomas’ 1 ic Oil cured them,” and if taken in_time it will cure seven times out of ten, 1 am confident it is u cure for the most obstinate cold or cough, and if any one will take n small teaspoon and half fill it with the Oil, and then place the eud of the spoon in one nos- tril and draw the Oil ont of the spoon into the head by sniffing an hard as they can, until the Oil falls over into the throat, and practice that twice a week, 1 don’t care how offensive their head may be, it will clean it out and cure their catarch, For deafness and earache it has done won .ers tain knowledge, is the only dubbed patent medicine that I have ever felt like recommending, for 1 tell you that T would not be withont it in my house for wny consideration. I am now ruffering with a pain like theumatism in i imb, and nothing relieves me like tric Oil, Dr. E, ¥, Crang, Corry, Thomas’ Sullivan & Fitzgerald, DEALERS IN . GROCERIES, PRLVISIONS, Crockery, (Hassware, BOOTS, SHIES, ETC A'so sgents for she following lines of Steamship Companies : Cunw'd, Auchor, Guion, American, srd Btawe Steamship Comyanies, DR 4TS 1 Fank of Aelan and Bank . Those w o Intend to sond for of Europe will fina it to their For of Irel friends to any ntere t o cali un | Hullivan & Fitzgerald, AGENTS, 343 Proadway, Counci! Blu®. In. Fus take the 1o goln; \hicage & Northwest- pPENCS & 9 Tralus leave Omaba 8.40 p. For .11 nformatian call on | rut. 14th and Farnaw sts. J BELL 1 allway Dopos, or at JAMES T CLAKK, General f (To the Consumers of Carriages & Bugges, I have a cympl.t3 stock of all the Latis: S:yles of C:rrisges, Phaetons and Opsa and Top Buggies, Congisting of der my own supervision, I should he chasing to cal Corner Broadway I'ne Celebrated Brew ter Sids Bar, The Hawlin Side Bar, The Whitney Side Bar, and The Mullhalland Spring. The Dexter Queen Buggy and Phaeton Old Reliable Kliptic 8pring Bugiies and Phaetons. They are ¢ll made o' ths best ma erials, ard un- Als) the f)leased to have those desirous of pur- and examine my stock. I will guar- antee satisfaction and warrant all work. H. F. HATTENHAUER, and __COUNCIL_BLUFFS, 1A, _ Seventh Streets. WHOLESALE Office No, 34 Pearl Street, T, MAYNE, COUNGIL BLUFFS Hleventh Avenue, Council Bluff: (Successors to J. W. Rodefer) AND RETAIL DEALERS IN LACKAWANNA, LEHIGH, BLOSSBURG AND ALL IOWA ~ GOAL! CONNELLSVILLE COKE, CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, ETC. Yards Cor. Bighth Street and\ 0. E. MAYNE STEAM FAGTORY MANUFACTURE BROOMS, BROOM HANDLES, Corn, Oats, The Very Best of Brooms Oonstantly on Hand. Market Price Paid for CORN MEAL, GRAHAM FLOUR AND CHOPPED FEED The Highest Rye, Barley L ™NID BROOM CORINN!I {Parties Wishing to Sell Broom Corn Will Please Send Sample, M-ANINT & . COUNCIL. WVLUEFE'S. Aro now d of alldcseriptio needles, eto. ing clscwhere, Mrs. J. B Metcalfe and Mrs., Belle Lewis ling In all kinds of fancy goous, such s Lace ‘Also Handkerchiots, both in slik and linen We hope the Isaics will call aud seo our stock of goods nt 638 Eroadway beforo go ‘mbroidoeries, Ladies’ Underwes hoso of all Kkinds, thread, pins, METCAL Hats, Caps, RUDE’S LAUNDRY. On Avenue B, No. 1902. (NEAR BROADWAY.) Best of Satisfaction Guaranteed. Lost Clothes made good, NOBETTER LAUNORY WEST OF CHICAGO. T. I RATDID. STEAM LAUNDRY. 723 W. Broadway. LARSON & ANDERSON, Proprietors, This laundry has just boen operied for hust nean, anud wo aro now prapared to do la andry work of all kinds and gusrantee satistaction. A vpecialty made of no work, wuch oy coliars, flu, fiilo shirts, otc. We waut everybody to us a trial, LARSON & ANDERSON. LD K DHON, K. L NHUOART, oaldent. Vice-Fres't. CITIZENS BANK Of Couuncil Bluffs, Organized under tho laws of the 5tate of Tows, $ 76,0 0 + 200,000 Interest paid on time deposite. Drafts iadicd on the principal cities of the United States and Puid up capital....... Authorized capial. Europe. Spocial attention wiven to calloctions aud correspondence with | rompt returus. DIKKCTOS, J.D.Edmundson, E L Shueart, J. T Hart, W W, W llace, 3 W, Hodter, 1A Miir, A W, Street, JyTdu P oBIRUO TS ~——WHOLESALE DEALERS IN—— Straw Goods, CHICAGO PRICES DUPLICATED, COUNOXT. BILOUEES?» and Buck Gloves, STARR & Bxu‘;t;:fi HOUSE, SIGN, AND Clothes gatherod up and delivered promptly, ORNAME"TAL pAl“TEns. PAPER HANGING, KALSOMINING AND GRAINING, A SPEOXAXLN R . Shop—Corner Broadway and Ssott St HUGHES & TOWSLEE, DEALERS IN Confectionery, Fruits,Nuts Cigars and Tobacco, Fresh Oysters and Ice Cream in £ocason, 12 MAIN 8T, Oouneil Bluffs, One of the best & cond-class Hotels in the West is the BROADWAY HOTEL, A.E BROWN, Propristor, Nos. 684 and 636 Brosdway, Council Bluts, lowa. Table supplied with tho best the market at= fords, Giuod rooms snd first-class beds, Terma very eaw UNION AVENUE HOTEL. 817 Lower Broadway, Mrs. C. Gerspacher & Son, FINST (LA'S HOTEL AT REASONABLE PAIC TRANSIENTS ACCOMMODATED L VOR BALE, GOOD REASONS FOR ——— ey